Inhibition of survivin by 2'- O -methyl phosphorothioate-modified steric-blocking antisense oligonucleotides.
Yalin LiSuxiang ChenKamal RahimizadehZhen ZhangRakesh N VeeduPublished in: RSC advances (2024)
Chemically modified antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) has been established as a successful therapeutic strategy for treating various human diseases. To date, ten ASO drugs, which are capable of either inducing mRNA degradation via RNase H recruitment (fomivirsen, mipomersen, inotersen, volanesorsen and tofersen) or splice modulation (eteplirsen, nusinersen, golodirsen, viltolarsen and casimersen), have been approved by the regulatory agencies for market entry. Nonetheless, none of these approved drugs are prescribed as cancer therapy. Towards this, we have developed steric-blocking ASOs targeting BIRC5 - a well-validated oncogene. Initial screening was performed by transfection of HepG2 cells with seven BIRC5 exon-2 targeting, uniformly 2'-OMe-PS modified ASOs at 400 nM respectively, leading to the identification of two best-performing candidates ASO-2 and ASO-7 in reducing the production of BIRC5 mRNA. Subsequent dose-response assay was conducted via transfection of HepG2 cells by different concentrations (400, 200, 100, 50, 25 nM) of ASO-2 and ASO-7 respectively, showing that both ASOs consistently and efficiently inhibited BIRC5 mRNA expression in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, western blot analysis confirmed that ASO-7 could significantly repress survivin production on protein level. Based on our preliminary results, we believe that ASO-7 could be a useful BIRC5 inhibitor for both research purpose and therapeutic development.